“…Across the 74 studies 10 main terms emerged within the analysis (see Table 2). Of the included studies, the term prostitution or language which operationalised the ‘selling of sex’ or ‘sex work’ for adolescents and children was utilised the most ( n = 12: Fredlund et al, 2018; Grosso et al, 2015; Kaestle, 2012; Lavoie et al, 2010; Lung et al, 2004; Nadon et al, 1998; Pedersen & Hegna, 2003; Rana, 2021; Sathyanarayana & Babu, 2012; Swahn et al, 2016; Wilson & Widom, 2010; Yates, 1991), followed by studies which utilised the term ‘commercial sexual exploitation’ ( n = 10: Bath et al, 2020; De Vries & Goggin, 2020; Franchino-Olsen, 2021; Hampton & Lieggi, 2020; Reid, 2011, 2014; Reid & Piquero, 2014, 2016; Rothman et al, 2019; Tsutomu Tanaka et al, 2019) or ‘commercial sexual exploitation of children’ specifically ( n = 8: Chang et al, 2016; De Vries et al, 2020; Lanctôt et al, 2020; Naramore et al, 2017; Panlilio et al, 2019; Rothman et al, 2020; Salisbury et al, 2015; Self-Brown et al, 2018). ‘Domestic minor sex trafficking’ ( n = 9: Chohaney, 2016; Ertl et al, 2020; Fedina et al, 2019; Moore et al, 2019, 2020, O’Brien et al, 2017a, 2017; Raj et al, 2019; Twis et al, 2020), ‘child sexual exploitation’ ( n = 8: Barnert et al, 2020; Blackburn et al, 2010; Commission for Children and Young People, 2015; Cook & Mott, 2020; Gatwiri et al, 2020; McKibbin, 2017;…”